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My Ántonia

My Ántonia (/ˈæntəniə/ AN-tə-nee-ə) is a novel published in 1918 by American writer Willa Cather, considered one of her best works.

My Ántonia
First edition dustjacket
AuthorWilla Cather
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical fiction
PublisherHoughton Mifflin (Boston)
Publication date
1918
Pages175
OCLC30894639
813/.52 20
LC ClassPS3505.A87 M8
Preceded byThe Song of the Lark 
TextMy Ántonia at Wikisource

The novel tells the stories of an orphaned boy from Virginia, Jim Burden, and the elder daughter in a family of Bohemian immigrants, Ántonia Shimerda, who are each brought as children to be pioneers in Nebraska towards the end of the 19th century. The first year in the very new place leaves strong impressions on both children, affecting them for life.

This novel is considered Cather's first masterpiece. Cather was praised for bringing the American West to life and making it personally interesting.

Title

The title refers to Ántonia, a young woman immigrant to the western prairies of the US. The story is told by her friend Jim, who arrives there at age ten to live with his grandparents. Jim thinks of her as his close friend, my Ántonia. The name is pronounced as it would be in Czech.[Notes 1]

Narration

Cather chose a first-person narrator because she felt that novels depicting deep emotion, such as My Ántonia, were most effectively narrated by a character in the story.[3] The novel is divided into sections called Books: I The Shimerdas, II The Hired Girls, III Lena Lingard, IV The Pioneer Woman's Story, V Cuzak's Boys.

Plot summary

Orphaned Jim Burden rides the trains from Virginia to Black Hawk, Nebraska, where he will live with his paternal grandparents. Jake, a farmhand from Virginia, rides with the 10-year-old boy. On the same train, headed to the same destination, is the Shimerda family from Bohemia. Jim lives with his grandparents in the home they have built, helping as he can with chores to ease the labor on the others. The home has the dining room and kitchen downstairs, like a basement, with small windows at the top of the walls, an arrangement quite different from Jim's home in Virginia. The sleeping quarters and parlor are at ground level. The Shimerda family paid for a homestead which proves to have no home on it, just a cave in the earth, and not much of the land broken for cultivation. The two families are nearest neighbors to each other in a sparsely settled land. Ántonia, the elder daughter in the Shimerda family, is a few years older than young Jim. The two are friends from the start, helped by Mrs. Shimerda asking that Jim teach both her daughters to read English. Ántonia helps Mrs. Burden in her kitchen when she visits, learning more about cooking and housekeeping. The first year is extremely difficult for the Shimerda family, without a proper house in the winter. Mr. Shimerda comes to thank the Burdens for the Christmas gifts given to them, and has a peaceful day with them, sharing a meal and the parts of a Christian tradition that Protestant Mr. Burden and Catholic Mr. Shimerda respect. He did not want to move from Bohemia, where he had a skilled trade, a home and friends with whom he could play his violin. His wife is sure life will be better for her children in America.

The pressures of the new life are too much for Mr. Shimerda, who kills himself before the winter is finished. The nearest Catholic priest is too far away for last rites. He is buried without formal rites at the corner marker of their homestead, a place that is left alone when the territory is later marked out with section lines and roads. Ántonia stops her lessons and begins to work the land with her older brother. The wood piled up to build their log cabin is made into a house. Jim continues to have adventures with Ántonia when they can, discovering nature around them, alive with color in summer and almost monotone in winter. She is a girl full of life. Deep memories are set in both of them from the adventures they share, including the time Jim killed a long rattlesnake with a shovel they were fetching for Ambrosch, her older brother.

A few years after Jim arrives, his grandparents move to the edge of town, buying a house while renting their farm. Their neighbors, the Harlings, have a housekeeper to help with meals and care of the children. When they need a new housekeeper, Mrs. Burden connects Ántonia with Mrs. Harling, who hires her for good wages. Becoming a town girl is a success, as Ántonia is popular with the children, and learns more about running a household, letting her brother handle the heavy farm chores. She stays in town for a few years, having her worst experience with Mr. and Mrs. Cutter. The couple goes out of town while she is their housekeeper, after Mr. Cutter said something that made Ántonia uncomfortable to stay alone in the house as requested. Jim stays there in her place, only to be surprised by Mr. Cutter returning to rape Ántonia, whom he expects will be alone and defenseless. Instead, Jim attacks the intruder, belatedly realizing that it is Mr. Cutter.

 
Pavelka house in rural Webster County, Nebraska, setting of "Cuzak's Boys"[4]

Jim does well in school, the valedictorian of his high school class. He attends the new state university in Lincoln, where his mind is opened to a new intellectual life. In his second year, he finds one of the immigrant farm girls, Lena, is in Lincoln, too, with a successful dressmaking business. He takes her to plays, which they both enjoy. His teacher realizes that Jim is so distracted from his studies, that he suggests Jim come with him to finish his studies at Harvard in Boston. He does, where he then studies the law. He becomes an attorney for one of the western railroads. He keeps in touch with Ántonia, whose life takes a hard turn when the man she loves proposes marriage, but deceives her and leaves her with child. She moves back in with her mother. Years later, Jim visits Ántonia, meeting Anton Cuzak, her husband and father of ten more children, on their farm in Nebraska. He visits with them, getting to know her sons especially. They know all about him, as he features in the stories of their mother's childhood. She is happy with her brood and all the work of a farm wife. Jim makes plans to take her sons on a hunting trip next year.

Reception and literary significance

My Ántonia was enthusiastically received in 1918 when it was first published. It was considered a masterpiece and placed Cather in the forefront of novelists. Today, it is considered her first masterpiece. Cather was praised for bringing the American West to life and making it personally interesting. It brought place forward almost as if it were one of the characters, while at the same time playing upon the universality of the emotions, which in turn promoted regional American literature as a valid part of mainstream literature.[5][6]: vii 

"As Cather intended, there is no plot in the usual sense of the word. Instead, each book contains thematic contrasts."[7] The novel was a departure from the focus on wealthy families in American literature; "it was a radical aesthetic move for Cather to feature lower-class, immigrant 'hired girls.'"[7]

Cather also makes a number of comments concerning her views on women's rights, and there are many disguised sexual metaphors in the text.[6]: xv 

My Ántonia is a selection of The Big Read, the community-wide reading program of The National Endowment for the Arts.[8] For the communities and books in the program since 2007, see History of the program since 2007.[9]

Writing in February 2020, critic and essayist Robert Christgau called My Ántonia a "magnificent, still too obscure novel" and said it "scrupulously documents the facts and foibles of farming as way of life and means of production, although not in the detail of O Pioneers!"[10]

When author and columnist Rebecca Traister was asked by Ezra Klein during his New York Times podcast on March 19, 2021, if there was a book she rereads for the “sheer beauty of the prose” Traister was emphatic:  “For the beauty of the writing, I mean, I would say that my go-to is actually My Antonia by Willa Cather, which is a book I first read in high school and found slightly boring but beautiful, and then read again in my 20s and was just totally enraptured by and then have gone back to again and again and again as a beautiful piece of writing.”[11]

Publication history

The novel was shaped by the contribution of Viola Roseboro', Cather's editor at McClure's Magazine, who read the original manuscript after it had been repeatedly rejected, and told Cather that she should rewrite it from Jim's viewpoint.[12]

The 1918 version of My Antonia begins with an Introduction in which an author-narrator, supposed to be Cather herself, converses with her adult friend, Jim Burden, during a train journey. Jim is now a successful New York lawyer but trapped in an unhappy and childless marriage to a wealthy, activist woman.[13]: 15  Cather agreed with her publisher at Houghton Mifflin to cut that introduction when a revised edition of the novel was published in 1926.[13]: 14  A brief introduction with Jim taking that train ride, speaking with an unnamed woman who also knew Ántonia about writing about her, is included in the version at Project Gutenberg.[14]

Allusions to the novel

Douglas Sirk's film, The Tarnished Angels, makes reference to My Ántonia as the last book read 12 years earlier by heroine, LaVerne, played by Dorothy Malone. She discovers the book in the apartment of the alcoholic reporter, Burke Devlin, played by Rock Hudson. After LaVerne's husband, Roger (played by Robert Stack), dies in an airplane racing accident, Burke Devlin sends LaVerne and her son, Jack, on a plane to Chicago, which will connect them to their next flight to Nebraska to start a new life. In the final scene, as LaVerne boards her plane, Burke hands LaVerne the book, My Ántonia.

Emmylou Harris' 2000 album Red Dirt Girl features the wistful song "My Ántonia", as a duet with Dave Matthews. Harris wrote the song from Jim's perspective as he reflects on his long lost love.

The French songwriter and singer, Dominique A, wrote a song inspired by the novel, called "Antonia" (from the LP Auguri, 2001).

In Richard Powers' 2006 novel The Echo Maker the character Mark Schluter reads My Ántonia on the recommendation of his nurse, who notes that it is "[A] very sexy story. ... About a young Nebraska country boy who has the hots for an older woman" (page 240).

In Anton Shammas' 1986 novel Arabesques, the autobiographical character of Anton reads My Ántonia on the plane to a writers' workshop in Iowa. It is the first novel he ever read, and he expects Iowa to have the same grass "the color of wine stains" that Cather describes of Nebraska.[15]

Dogfish Head Brewery in Milton, Delaware brews a continually-hopped imperial pilsner named My Ántonia.[16]

In the introduction of his New Year's Day opinion piece entitled "2019: The Year of the Wolves" in The New York Times, David Brooks evoked Pavel's deathbed story[Notes 2] from My Ántonia[17][Notes 3] of how he and Peter[Notes 4] had been banished from their village in the Ukraine for throwing a bride and groom to the wolves to save their own lives when the six sledges of the inebriated bridal party were attacked by about 30 wolves.[18]: 56–60 [19][Notes 5] Pavel, who was the friend of the groom, had unsuccessfully attempted to convince the groom to save himself too by sacrificing his bride, but the groom fought to protect her.[18]: 56–60  When the two sole survivors returned along to the village, they became pariahs, cast out of their own village and everywhere they went. "Pavel's own mother would not look at him. They went away to strange towns, but when people learned where they came from, they were always asked if they knew the two men who had fed the bride to the wolves. Wherever they went, the story followed them."[18]: 56–60  This is how they came to settle in Black Hawk on the Nebraska prairie.[17] Brooks compares 2019 to that Russian winter in the 19th century where it was known that wolves have been attacking humans, and a vulnerable wedding party that is a "bit drunk" is being led by two men who are willing to do anything to survive, including throwing their friend and his wife to the wolves.[17][19]: 55–6  He foresees the upcoming year as one "where good people lay low and where wolves are left free to prey on the weak".[17] In his deathbed confession, Pavel explained, "...the ones who do the sacrificing, who throwaway the baggage — bodies, loyalties, allegiances — are the ones who survive."[18]: 56–60 

In Barbara Kingsolver's 2018 novel Unsheltered, a main character is named Willa, after Willa Cather. A paragraph of My Ántonia is quoted in Kingsolver's novel in the context of a dead woman wanting it read at her funeral.[20]

In Bret Stephens' opinion piece in The New York Times, July 19, 2019, titled ”The Perfect Antidote to Trump – Willa Cather knew what made America great”[21] Stephens wrote that Willa Cather's My Ántonia is “a book for our times—and the perfect antidote to our President.” “My Ántonia becomes an education in what it means to be American.” We need to recall “what we’re really about, starting by rereading My Ántonia.”

Adaptations

Television

My Antonia, a 1995 made-for-television movie, was adapted from the novel.

Stage

The Illusion Theater in Minneapolis, MN, staged an adaptation of My Ántonia by playwright Allison Moore and original music by Roberta Carlson in 2010. The production received an Ivey Award, and toured Minnesota in 2012, 2013, and Nebraska in 2019.[22]

The Celebration Company at The Station Theatre in Urbana, Illinois, performed a stage adaptation of My Ántonia in December 2011. The adaptation was written by Celebration Company member Jarrett Dapier.[23]

Book-It Repertory Theater produced an original stage adaptation of My Ántonia in December 2018. Adapted by Annie Lareau, it ran from November 29-December 30, 2018 at the Center Theater in Seattle, WA.[24] Seattle Weekly praised the production, saying, "...with the current administration’s racial fearmongering as a goad, Book-It’s exploring yet another aspect of Cather’s 1915 novel My Ántonia, as adapted and directed by Annie Lareau, mixing racially traditional and nontraditional casting in ways that encourage the audience to view its tale of the immigrant experience in broader terms."[25]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Cather writes, "The Bohemian name Ántonia is strongly accented on the first syllable, like the English name Anthony, and the i is given the sound of long e. The name is pronounced An'-ton-ee-ah.", a footnote in the text, at the start of Book I The Shimerdas.[1]: 9  The Czech pronunciation can be heard at this sound file.[2] Note that English "Anthony" begins with a different vowel sound than the woman's name in Czech. Cather's explanation of the "i" and "a" phonemes is not entirely clear: "ee-yah" would be more accurate than "ee-ah".
  2. ^ Early in the story, Peter and Pavel are deeply in debt to Wick Cutter, who is known in Black Hawk for lending money. Ántonia and Jim accompany Ántonia's father to visit Pavel after he is fatally injured during the construction of a barn. Pavel shares his deathbed confession with them. After Pavel dies, Peter leaves Black Hawk.
  3. ^ Ántonia's father befriended the two Russians, Pavel and Peter.
  4. ^ In his 2009 article in the Great Plains Quarterly, Robin Chen wrote that the names, Peter and Pavel, are those of "stock characters in Russian folktales" whom Ántonia's father befriended two Russians, Pavel and Peter.
  5. ^ Cohen also noted Cather's depiction of wolves is not based on verifiable sources on the behaviour of real wolves. People often overestimate the size of packs of wolves and individual wolves.

References

  1. ^ Cather, Willa (11 December 2008). Sharistanian, Janet (ed.). My Ántonia. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-953814-0.
  2. ^ "Pronunciations for Antonia". Forvo. Retrieved August 19, 2020. Pending pronunciation for Czech[dead link]
  3. ^ Woodress, James (1987). Willa Cather: A Literary Life. Lincoln, NE h: University of Nebraska Press. p. 289. ISBN 9780803247345.
  4. ^ Billesbach, Ann E. . Nebraska State Historical Society. Archived from the original on April 13, 2000. Retrieved September 12, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  5. ^ Heller, Terry (2007). "Cather's My Ántonia Promotes Regional Literature"". In Gorman, Robert F. (ed.). Great Events from History: The 20th Century: 1901–1940 – Volume 3 1915–1923. Pasadena, California: Salem Press. pp. 1403–1406. ISBN 978-1-58765-327-8.
  6. ^ a b Murphy, John J. (1994). Introduction to Cather, Willa My Ántonia. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-018764-2.
  7. ^ a b . National Endowment for the Arts. Archived from the original on 1 November 2013. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  8. ^ "Description of My Ántonia". The Big Read. National Endowment for the Arts. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
  9. ^ "History/Overview of The Big Read". National Endowment of the Arts. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  10. ^ Christgau, Robert (February 26, 2020). "Queen of Plainstyle". And It Don't Stop. SubStack. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
  11. ^ Klein, Ezra (2021-03-19). "Opinion | Andrew Cuomo and the Performance of Power". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-03-24.
  12. ^ The Strange, Forgotten Life of Viola Roseboro', in The Paris Review; by Stephanie Gorton; published February 24, 2020; retrieved August 8, 2021
  13. ^ a b O'Brien, Sharon, ed. (1998). New Essays on My Antonia. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45275-9.
  14. ^ My Antonia by Willa Cather. Project Gutenberg. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  15. ^ Shammas, Anton. Arabesques. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1988. p. 138.
  16. ^ "My Antonia". Dogfish Head Brewery. Milton, Delaware. 22 September 2009. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
  17. ^ a b c d Brooks, David (January 1, 2019). "2019: The Year of the Wolves". The New York Times. Opinion. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
  18. ^ a b c d Cather, Willa (1994). My Antonia. New York: Dover.
  19. ^ a b Cohen, Robin (Winter 2009). "Jim, Antonia, and the Wolves Displacement in Cather's My Antonia" (PDF). Great Plains Quarterly. Great Plains Studies. Center for Great Plains Studies. 29 (1): 9. ISSN 0275-7664. Retrieved January 1, 2019. Pages=51-50
  20. ^ Kingsolver, Barbara (2018). Unsheltered. HarperCollins. p. 487. ISBN 978-0-06-268456-1.
  21. ^ Stephens, Bret (2019-07-20). "Opinion | The Perfect Antidote to Trump (Published 2019)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
  22. ^ "My Antonia". Illusion Theater. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  23. ^ "Past Seasons, Season 40". Urbana, Illinois: The Celebration Company at Station Theatre. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
  24. ^ "My Antonia". Seattle, Washington: Book-It Repertory Theater. 24 July 2018. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  25. ^ "In My Antonia, Extraordinary Acting Packs a Punch". Seattle, Washington: Seattle Weekly. 3 December 2018. Retrieved December 13, 2018.

Bibliography

Books

  • Bloom, Harold (editor) (1987) Willa Cather's My Ántonia Chelsea House, New York, ISBN 1-55546-035-6; eleven essays
  • Bloom, Harold (editor) (1991) Ántonia Chelsea House, New York, ISBN 0-7910-0950-5; more essays
  • Lindemann, Marilee (editor) (2005) The Cambridge Companion to Willa Cather Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, ISBN 0-521-82110-X
  • Meyering, Sheryl L. (2002) Understanding O pioneers! and My Antonia: A student casebook to issues, sources, and historical documents Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, ISBN 0-313-31390-3
  • Murphy, John J. (1989) My Ántonia: The road home Twayne Publishers, Boston, Massachusetts, ISBN 0-8057-7986-8
  • O'Brien, Sharon (1987) Willa Cather: The Emerging Voice Oxford University Press, Oxford, England, ISBN 0-19-504132-1
  • O'Brien, Sharon (editor) (1999) New essays on Cather's My Antonia Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, ISBN 0-521-45275-9
  • Rosowski, Susan J. (1989) Approaches to Teaching Cather's My Ántonia Modern Language Association of America, New York, ISBN 0-87352-520-5
  • Smith, Christopher (2001) Readings on My Antonia Greenhaven Press, San Diego, California, ISBN 0-7377-0181-1
  • Wenzl, Bernhard (2001) Mythologia Americana – Willa Cather’s Nebraska novels and the myth of the frontier Grin, Munich, ISBN 978-3-640-14909-4
  • Ying, Hsiao-ling (1999) The Quest for Self-actualization: Female protagonists in Willa Cather's Prairie trilogy Bookman Books, Taipei, Taiwan, ISBN 957-586-795-5

Articles

  • Fetterley, Judith (1986) "My Ántonia, Jim Burden, and the Dilemma of the Lesbian Writer" In Spector, Judith (editor) (1986) Gender Studies: New Directions in Feminist Criticism Bowling Green State University Popular Press, Bowling Green, Ohio, pages 43–59, ISBN 0-87972-351-3; and In Jay, Karla and Glasgow, Joanne (editors) (1990) Lesbian Texts and Contexts: Radical Revisions New York University Press, New York, pages 145–163, ISBN 0-8147-4175-4
  • Fischer, Mike (1990) "Pastoralism and Its Discontents: Willa Cather and the Burden of Imperialism" Mosaic (Winnipeg) 23(11): pp. 31–44
  • Fisher-Wirth, Ann (1993) "Out of the Mother: Loss in My Ántonia" Cather Studies 2: pp. 41–71
  • Gelfant, Blanche H. (1971) "The Forgotten Reaping-Hook: Sex in My Ántonia" American Literature 43: pp. 60–82
  • Giannone, Richard (1965) "Music in My Ántonia" Prairie Schooner 38(4); covered in Giannone, Richard (1968) Music in Willa Cather's Fiction University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Nebraska, pages 116–122, OCLC 598716
  • Holmes, Catherine D. (1999) "Jim Burden's Lost Worlds: Exile in My Ántonia" Twentieth-Century Literature 45(3): pp. 336–346
  • Lambert, Deborah G. (1982) "The Defeat of a Hero: Autonomy and Sexuality in My Ántonia" American Literature 53(4): pp. 676–690
  • Millington, Richard H. (1994) "Willa Cather and "The Storyteller": Hostility to the Novel in My Ántonia" American Literature 66(4): pp. 689–717
  • Prchal, Tim (2004) "The Bohemian Paradox: My Antonia and Popular Images of Czech Immigrants" MELUS (Society for the Study of the Multi- Ethnic Literature of the United States) 29(2): pp. 3–25
  • Tellefsen, Blythe (1999) "Blood in the Wheat: Willa Cather's My Antonia" Studies in American Fiction 27(2): pp. 229–244
  • Urgo, Joseph (1997) "Willa Cather and the Myth of American Migration" College English 59(2): pp. 206–217
  • Yukman, Claudia (1988) "Frontier Relationships in Willa Cather's My Ántonia" Pacific Coast Philology 23(1/2): pp. 94–105

External links

Ántonia, this, article, about, novel, willa, cather, 1995, film, adaptation, antonia, film, novel, published, 1918, american, writer, willa, cather, considered, best, works, first, edition, dustjacketauthorwilla, cathercountryunited, stateslanguageenglishgenre. This article is about the novel by Willa Cather For the 1995 film adaptation see My Antonia film My Antonia ˈ ae n t e n i e AN te nee e is a novel published in 1918 by American writer Willa Cather considered one of her best works My AntoniaFirst edition dustjacketAuthorWilla CatherCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreHistorical fictionPublisherHoughton Mifflin Boston Publication date1918Pages175OCLC30894639Dewey Decimal813 52 20LC ClassPS3505 A87 M8Preceded byThe Song of the Lark TextMy Antonia at WikisourceThe novel tells the stories of an orphaned boy from Virginia Jim Burden and the elder daughter in a family of Bohemian immigrants Antonia Shimerda who are each brought as children to be pioneers in Nebraska towards the end of the 19th century The first year in the very new place leaves strong impressions on both children affecting them for life This novel is considered Cather s first masterpiece Cather was praised for bringing the American West to life and making it personally interesting Contents 1 Title 2 Narration 3 Plot summary 4 Reception and literary significance 5 Publication history 6 Allusions to the novel 7 Adaptations 7 1 Television 7 2 Stage 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 11 1 Books 11 2 Articles 12 External linksTitle EditThe title refers to Antonia a young woman immigrant to the western prairies of the US The story is told by her friend Jim who arrives there at age ten to live with his grandparents Jim thinks of her as his close friend my Antonia The name is pronounced as it would be in Czech Notes 1 Narration EditCather chose a first person narrator because she felt that novels depicting deep emotion such as My Antonia were most effectively narrated by a character in the story 3 The novel is divided into sections called Books I The Shimerdas II The Hired Girls III Lena Lingard IV The Pioneer Woman s Story V Cuzak s Boys Plot summary EditOrphaned Jim Burden rides the trains from Virginia to Black Hawk Nebraska where he will live with his paternal grandparents Jake a farmhand from Virginia rides with the 10 year old boy On the same train headed to the same destination is the Shimerda family from Bohemia Jim lives with his grandparents in the home they have built helping as he can with chores to ease the labor on the others The home has the dining room and kitchen downstairs like a basement with small windows at the top of the walls an arrangement quite different from Jim s home in Virginia The sleeping quarters and parlor are at ground level The Shimerda family paid for a homestead which proves to have no home on it just a cave in the earth and not much of the land broken for cultivation The two families are nearest neighbors to each other in a sparsely settled land Antonia the elder daughter in the Shimerda family is a few years older than young Jim The two are friends from the start helped by Mrs Shimerda asking that Jim teach both her daughters to read English Antonia helps Mrs Burden in her kitchen when she visits learning more about cooking and housekeeping The first year is extremely difficult for the Shimerda family without a proper house in the winter Mr Shimerda comes to thank the Burdens for the Christmas gifts given to them and has a peaceful day with them sharing a meal and the parts of a Christian tradition that Protestant Mr Burden and Catholic Mr Shimerda respect He did not want to move from Bohemia where he had a skilled trade a home and friends with whom he could play his violin His wife is sure life will be better for her children in America The pressures of the new life are too much for Mr Shimerda who kills himself before the winter is finished The nearest Catholic priest is too far away for last rites He is buried without formal rites at the corner marker of their homestead a place that is left alone when the territory is later marked out with section lines and roads Antonia stops her lessons and begins to work the land with her older brother The wood piled up to build their log cabin is made into a house Jim continues to have adventures with Antonia when they can discovering nature around them alive with color in summer and almost monotone in winter She is a girl full of life Deep memories are set in both of them from the adventures they share including the time Jim killed a long rattlesnake with a shovel they were fetching for Ambrosch her older brother A few years after Jim arrives his grandparents move to the edge of town buying a house while renting their farm Their neighbors the Harlings have a housekeeper to help with meals and care of the children When they need a new housekeeper Mrs Burden connects Antonia with Mrs Harling who hires her for good wages Becoming a town girl is a success as Antonia is popular with the children and learns more about running a household letting her brother handle the heavy farm chores She stays in town for a few years having her worst experience with Mr and Mrs Cutter The couple goes out of town while she is their housekeeper after Mr Cutter said something that made Antonia uncomfortable to stay alone in the house as requested Jim stays there in her place only to be surprised by Mr Cutter returning to rape Antonia whom he expects will be alone and defenseless Instead Jim attacks the intruder belatedly realizing that it is Mr Cutter Pavelka house in rural Webster County Nebraska setting of Cuzak s Boys 4 Jim does well in school the valedictorian of his high school class He attends the new state university in Lincoln where his mind is opened to a new intellectual life In his second year he finds one of the immigrant farm girls Lena is in Lincoln too with a successful dressmaking business He takes her to plays which they both enjoy His teacher realizes that Jim is so distracted from his studies that he suggests Jim come with him to finish his studies at Harvard in Boston He does where he then studies the law He becomes an attorney for one of the western railroads He keeps in touch with Antonia whose life takes a hard turn when the man she loves proposes marriage but deceives her and leaves her with child She moves back in with her mother Years later Jim visits Antonia meeting Anton Cuzak her husband and father of ten more children on their farm in Nebraska He visits with them getting to know her sons especially They know all about him as he features in the stories of their mother s childhood She is happy with her brood and all the work of a farm wife Jim makes plans to take her sons on a hunting trip next year Reception and literary significance EditMy Antonia was enthusiastically received in 1918 when it was first published It was considered a masterpiece and placed Cather in the forefront of novelists Today it is considered her first masterpiece Cather was praised for bringing the American West to life and making it personally interesting It brought place forward almost as if it were one of the characters while at the same time playing upon the universality of the emotions which in turn promoted regional American literature as a valid part of mainstream literature 5 6 vii As Cather intended there is no plot in the usual sense of the word Instead each book contains thematic contrasts 7 The novel was a departure from the focus on wealthy families in American literature it was a radical aesthetic move for Cather to feature lower class immigrant hired girls 7 Cather also makes a number of comments concerning her views on women s rights and there are many disguised sexual metaphors in the text 6 xv My Antonia is a selection of The Big Read the community wide reading program of The National Endowment for the Arts 8 For the communities and books in the program since 2007 see History of the program since 2007 9 Writing in February 2020 critic and essayist Robert Christgau called My Antonia a magnificent still too obscure novel and said it scrupulously documents the facts and foibles of farming as way of life and means of production although not in the detail of O Pioneers 10 When author and columnist Rebecca Traister was asked by Ezra Klein during his New York Times podcast on March 19 2021 if there was a book she rereads for the sheer beauty of the prose Traister was emphatic For the beauty of the writing I mean I would say that my go to is actually My Antonia by Willa Cather which is a book I first read in high school and found slightly boring but beautiful and then read again in my 20s and was just totally enraptured by and then have gone back to again and again and again as a beautiful piece of writing 11 Publication history EditThe novel was shaped by the contribution of Viola Roseboro Cather s editor at McClure s Magazine who read the original manuscript after it had been repeatedly rejected and told Cather that she should rewrite it from Jim s viewpoint 12 The 1918 version of My Antonia begins with an Introduction in which an author narrator supposed to be Cather herself converses with her adult friend Jim Burden during a train journey Jim is now a successful New York lawyer but trapped in an unhappy and childless marriage to a wealthy activist woman 13 15 Cather agreed with her publisher at Houghton Mifflin to cut that introduction when a revised edition of the novel was published in 1926 13 14 A brief introduction with Jim taking that train ride speaking with an unnamed woman who also knew Antonia about writing about her is included in the version at Project Gutenberg 14 Allusions to the novel EditDouglas Sirk s film The Tarnished Angels makes reference to My Antonia as the last book read 12 years earlier by heroine LaVerne played by Dorothy Malone She discovers the book in the apartment of the alcoholic reporter Burke Devlin played by Rock Hudson After LaVerne s husband Roger played by Robert Stack dies in an airplane racing accident Burke Devlin sends LaVerne and her son Jack on a plane to Chicago which will connect them to their next flight to Nebraska to start a new life In the final scene as LaVerne boards her plane Burke hands LaVerne the book My Antonia Emmylou Harris 2000 album Red Dirt Girl features the wistful song My Antonia as a duet with Dave Matthews Harris wrote the song from Jim s perspective as he reflects on his long lost love The French songwriter and singer Dominique A wrote a song inspired by the novel called Antonia from the LP Auguri 2001 In Richard Powers 2006 novel The Echo Maker the character Mark Schluter reads My Antonia on the recommendation of his nurse who notes that it is A very sexy story About a young Nebraska country boy who has the hots for an older woman page 240 In Anton Shammas 1986 novel Arabesques the autobiographical character of Anton reads My Antonia on the plane to a writers workshop in Iowa It is the first novel he ever read and he expects Iowa to have the same grass the color of wine stains that Cather describes of Nebraska 15 Dogfish Head Brewery in Milton Delaware brews a continually hopped imperial pilsner named My Antonia 16 In the introduction of his New Year s Day opinion piece entitled 2019 The Year of the Wolves in The New York Times David Brooks evoked Pavel s deathbed story Notes 2 from My Antonia 17 Notes 3 of how he and Peter Notes 4 had been banished from their village in the Ukraine for throwing a bride and groom to the wolves to save their own lives when the six sledges of the inebriated bridal party were attacked by about 30 wolves 18 56 60 19 Notes 5 Pavel who was the friend of the groom had unsuccessfully attempted to convince the groom to save himself too by sacrificing his bride but the groom fought to protect her 18 56 60 When the two sole survivors returned along to the village they became pariahs cast out of their own village and everywhere they went Pavel s own mother would not look at him They went away to strange towns but when people learned where they came from they were always asked if they knew the two men who had fed the bride to the wolves Wherever they went the story followed them 18 56 60 This is how they came to settle in Black Hawk on the Nebraska prairie 17 Brooks compares 2019 to that Russian winter in the 19th century where it was known that wolves have been attacking humans and a vulnerable wedding party that is a bit drunk is being led by two men who are willing to do anything to survive including throwing their friend and his wife to the wolves 17 19 55 6 He foresees the upcoming year as one where good people lay low and where wolves are left free to prey on the weak 17 In his deathbed confession Pavel explained the ones who do the sacrificing who throwaway the baggage bodies loyalties allegiances are the ones who survive 18 56 60 In Barbara Kingsolver s 2018 novel Unsheltered a main character is named Willa after Willa Cather A paragraph of My Antonia is quoted in Kingsolver s novel in the context of a dead woman wanting it read at her funeral 20 In Bret Stephens opinion piece in The New York Times July 19 2019 titled The Perfect Antidote to Trump Willa Cather knew what made America great 21 Stephens wrote that Willa Cather s My Antonia is a book for our times and the perfect antidote to our President My Antonia becomes an education in what it means to be American We need to recall what we re really about starting by rereading My Antonia Adaptations EditTelevision Edit My Antonia a 1995 made for television movie was adapted from the novel Stage Edit The Illusion Theater in Minneapolis MN staged an adaptation of My Antonia by playwright Allison Moore and original music by Roberta Carlson in 2010 The production received an Ivey Award and toured Minnesota in 2012 2013 and Nebraska in 2019 22 The Celebration Company at The Station Theatre in Urbana Illinois performed a stage adaptation of My Antonia in December 2011 The adaptation was written by Celebration Company member Jarrett Dapier 23 Book It Repertory Theater produced an original stage adaptation of My Antonia in December 2018 Adapted by Annie Lareau it ran from November 29 December 30 2018 at the Center Theater in Seattle WA 24 Seattle Weekly praised the production saying with the current administration s racial fearmongering as a goad Book It s exploring yet another aspect of Cather s 1915 novel My Antonia as adapted and directed by Annie Lareau mixing racially traditional and nontraditional casting in ways that encourage the audience to view its tale of the immigrant experience in broader terms 25 See also EditPavelka FarmsteadNotes Edit Cather writes The Bohemian name Antonia is strongly accented on the first syllable like the English name Anthony and the i is given the sound of long e The name is pronounced An ton ee ah a footnote in the text at the start of Book I The Shimerdas 1 9 The Czech pronunciation can be heard at this sound file 2 Note that English Anthony begins with a different vowel sound than the woman s name in Czech Cather s explanation of the i and a phonemes is not entirely clear ee yah would be more accurate than ee ah Early in the story Peter and Pavel are deeply in debt to Wick Cutter who is known in Black Hawk for lending money Antonia and Jim accompany Antonia s father to visit Pavel after he is fatally injured during the construction of a barn Pavel shares his deathbed confession with them After Pavel dies Peter leaves Black Hawk Antonia s father befriended the two Russians Pavel and Peter In his 2009 article in the Great Plains Quarterly Robin Chen wrote that the names Peter and Pavel are those of stock characters in Russian folktales whom Antonia s father befriended two Russians Pavel and Peter Cohen also noted Cather s depiction of wolves is not based on verifiable sources on the behaviour of real wolves People often overestimate the size of packs of wolves and individual wolves References Edit Cather Willa 11 December 2008 Sharistanian Janet ed My Antonia Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 953814 0 Pronunciations for Antonia Forvo Retrieved August 19 2020 Pending pronunciation for Czech dead link Woodress James 1987 Willa Cather A Literary Life Lincoln NE h University of Nebraska Press p 289 ISBN 9780803247345 Billesbach Ann E Pavelka Farmstead Antonia Farmstead pdf WT00 104 Listed 1979 04 13 Nebraska State Historical Society Archived from the original on April 13 2000 Retrieved September 12 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Heller Terry 2007 Cather s My Antonia Promotes Regional Literature In Gorman Robert F ed Great Events from History The 20th Century 1901 1940 Volume 3 1915 1923 Pasadena California Salem Press pp 1403 1406 ISBN 978 1 58765 327 8 a b Murphy John J 1994 Introduction to Cather WillaMy Antonia New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 018764 2 a b My Antonia by Willa Cather Introduction to the Book National Endowment for the Arts Archived from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved September 12 2015 Description of My Antonia The Big Read National Endowment for the Arts Retrieved July 28 2015 History Overview of The Big Read National Endowment of the Arts Retrieved September 12 2015 Christgau Robert February 26 2020 Queen of Plainstyle And It Don t Stop SubStack Retrieved February 27 2020 Klein Ezra 2021 03 19 Opinion Andrew Cuomo and the Performance of Power The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 03 24 The Strange Forgotten Life of Viola Roseboro in The Paris Review by Stephanie Gorton published February 24 2020 retrieved August 8 2021 a b O Brien Sharon ed 1998 New Essays on My Antonia Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 45275 9 My Antonia by Willa Cather Project Gutenberg Retrieved September 9 2015 Shammas Anton Arabesques New York Harper amp Row Publishers 1988 p 138 My Antonia Dogfish Head Brewery Milton Delaware 22 September 2009 Retrieved July 28 2015 a b c d Brooks David January 1 2019 2019 The Year of the Wolves The New York Times Opinion ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 1 2019 a b c d Cather Willa 1994 My Antonia New York Dover a b Cohen Robin Winter 2009 Jim Antonia and the Wolves Displacement in Cather s My Antonia PDF Great Plains Quarterly Great Plains Studies Center for Great Plains Studies 29 1 9 ISSN 0275 7664 Retrieved January 1 2019 Pages 51 50 Kingsolver Barbara 2018 Unsheltered HarperCollins p 487 ISBN 978 0 06 268456 1 Stephens Bret 2019 07 20 Opinion The Perfect Antidote to Trump Published 2019 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 03 03 My Antonia Illusion Theater Retrieved 3 March 2019 Past Seasons Season 40 Urbana Illinois The Celebration Company at Station Theatre Retrieved July 28 2015 My Antonia Seattle Washington Book It Repertory Theater 24 July 2018 Retrieved December 13 2018 In My Antonia Extraordinary Acting Packs a Punch Seattle Washington Seattle Weekly 3 December 2018 Retrieved December 13 2018 Bibliography EditBooks Edit Bloom Harold editor 1987 Willa Cather s My Antonia Chelsea House New York ISBN 1 55546 035 6 eleven essays Bloom Harold editor 1991 Antonia Chelsea House New York ISBN 0 7910 0950 5 more essays Lindemann Marilee editor 2005 The Cambridge Companion to Willa Cather Cambridge University Press Cambridge England ISBN 0 521 82110 X Meyering Sheryl L 2002 Understanding O pioneers and My Antonia A student casebook to issues sources and historical documents Greenwood Press Westport Connecticut ISBN 0 313 31390 3 Murphy John J 1989 My Antonia The road home Twayne Publishers Boston Massachusetts ISBN 0 8057 7986 8 O Brien Sharon 1987 Willa Cather The Emerging Voice Oxford University Press Oxford England ISBN 0 19 504132 1 O Brien Sharon editor 1999 New essays on Cather s My Antonia Cambridge University Press Cambridge England ISBN 0 521 45275 9 Rosowski Susan J 1989 Approaches to Teaching Cather s My Antonia Modern Language Association of America New York ISBN 0 87352 520 5 Smith Christopher 2001 Readings on My Antonia Greenhaven Press San Diego California ISBN 0 7377 0181 1 Wenzl Bernhard 2001 Mythologia Americana Willa Cather s Nebraska novels and the myth of the frontier Grin Munich ISBN 978 3 640 14909 4 Ying Hsiao ling 1999 The Quest for Self actualization Female protagonists in Willa Cather s Prairie trilogy Bookman Books Taipei Taiwan ISBN 957 586 795 5Articles Edit Fetterley Judith 1986 My Antonia Jim Burden and the Dilemma of the Lesbian Writer In Spector Judith editor 1986 Gender Studies New Directions in Feminist Criticism Bowling Green State University Popular Press Bowling Green Ohio pages 43 59 ISBN 0 87972 351 3 and In Jay Karla and Glasgow Joanne editors 1990 Lesbian Texts and Contexts Radical Revisions New York University Press New York pages 145 163 ISBN 0 8147 4175 4 Fischer Mike 1990 Pastoralism and Its Discontents Willa Cather and the Burden of Imperialism Mosaic Winnipeg 23 11 pp 31 44 Fisher Wirth Ann 1993 Out of the Mother Loss in My Antonia Cather Studies 2 pp 41 71 Gelfant Blanche H 1971 The Forgotten Reaping Hook Sex in My Antonia American Literature 43 pp 60 82 Giannone Richard 1965 Music in My Antonia Prairie Schooner 38 4 covered in Giannone Richard 1968 Music in Willa Cather s Fiction University of Nebraska Press Lincoln Nebraska pages 116 122 OCLC 598716 Holmes Catherine D 1999 Jim Burden s Lost Worlds Exile in My Antonia Twentieth Century Literature 45 3 pp 336 346 Lambert Deborah G 1982 The Defeat of a Hero Autonomy and Sexuality in My Antonia American Literature 53 4 pp 676 690 Millington Richard H 1994 Willa Cather and The Storyteller Hostility to the Novel in My Antonia American Literature 66 4 pp 689 717 Prchal Tim 2004 The Bohemian Paradox My Antonia and Popular Images of Czech Immigrants MELUS Society for the Study of the Multi Ethnic Literature of the United States 29 2 pp 3 25 Tellefsen Blythe 1999 Blood in the Wheat Willa Cather s My Antonia Studies in American Fiction 27 2 pp 229 244 Urgo Joseph 1997 Willa Cather and the Myth of American Migration College English 59 2 pp 206 217 Yukman Claudia 1988 Frontier Relationships in Willa Cather s My Antonia Pacific Coast Philology 23 1 2 pp 94 105External links Edit The full text of My Antonia at Wikisource My Antonia at Project Gutenberg My Antonia at Standard Ebooks My Antonia public domain audiobook at LibriVox My Antonia Audio Guide My Antonia at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title My Antonia amp oldid 1136353900, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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